Buckley v. Valeo at 50 Rekindles the Fight Over Money in Politics
New commentary questions whether treating spending as speech has concentrated political influence.
Overview
- Allen J. Dickerson argues in Reason that Buckley protected effective advocacy by deeming caps on expenditures presumptively unconstitutional.
- He highlights the ruling’s emphasis on association and the pooling of small donations, with disclosure allowed but limited when reprisals are reasonably likely.
- CREW contends the decision and later cases enabled surging election costs dominated by wealthy donors, including large sums from untraceable sources.
- The watchdog argues contributions can shape access and policy before any ad is aired, pointing to examples it links to pro‑crypto shifts and clemency decisions.
- CREW defends robust transparency as vital for public scrutiny, while Buckley’s defenders warn that disclosure can chill participation and expose donors to harassment.